Author
Keywords
Abstract

This paper examines the role of traditional woodworking and building crafts as a local resource in a country in transition from socialism to a market-based economy. The authors use an applied anthropological approach to integrate the preservation of intangible heritage (in the form of traditional crafts) and sustainable heritage-based livelihoods into a contemporary institutional framework. The paper starts with a theoretical discussion of skills as a form of tacit knowledge, a mode of knowing that does not easily submit to verbal explanation and transfer. The authors then discuss the methodology, purposes, procedures and precedents of collecting information about artisans and their skills. Relying on fieldwork data collected in Viljandi County, Estonia in the summer of 2008, the authors sketch an overview of relations between artisans and the communities they live in. The paper also examines several related phenomena such as economic sustainability of the crafts, intergenerational transmission of skills, changes in the relationship between the artisan and the customer, and relevant implications for crafts-related institutions and policies.

Year of Publication
2011
Journal
International Journal of Heritage Studies
Volume
17
Number
5
Number of Pages
401-425
Publication Language
English
ISSN Number
13527258 (ISSN)
URL
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79961090123&doi=10.1080%2f13527258.2011.589199&partnerID=40&md5=88be909aada8a749a665ecd7bc7c47c8
DOI
10.1080/13527258.2011.589199
Download citation